Company The
W.F. Stanley and Co. company continued to expand after Stanley's death, moving to a factory in
New Eltham (
The Stanley Scientific Instrument Works) in 1916. During World War I, the factory was requisitioned by the government. Between the wars, it continued to expand its position in the market place for quality surveying instruments, although it was requisitioned by the British Government during World War II. After the war, the company continued to expand, participating in many large projects – for example, and Royal Navy ships used the company's
compasses and other navigational instruments. The company went into
liquidation in July 1999 – the main factors were not investing the proceeds of the sale of the factory land to buying new machinery, the high value of the pound affecting export orders, and the loss of
Ministry of Defence orders following the end of the
Cold War.
Clock tower A cast-iron clock tower was erected in South Norwood at the junction of Station Road and the High Street in 1907 to mark the golden wedding anniversary of William and Eliza Stanley, as a measure of the esteem in which they were held in the locality.
Wetherspoon's pub On 18 December 1998, the
Wetherspoon's pub chain opened
The William Stanley on the High Street in South Norwood. It is a 19th-century style of building, with a portrait of Stanley inside, as well as pictures of other Norwood notables (
Lillie Langtry, H. Tinsley (another scientific instrument maker),
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and
John Brock). The Wetherspoon's pub closed in 2016 and reopened as the Shelverdine Goathouse. The William Stanley pub sign and memorabilia from the pub were donated to Stanley Halls where they are on show. The Shelverdine Goathouse pub closed in December 2025.
Selected inventions and patents 78 patents are attributed to Stanley (sometimes the number is quoted as 79, as in 1885 a proposed patent application was never followed through) Many of the patents Stanley applied for were improvements on techniques or of other patents. • 1849: Wire bicycle ('spider-wheel') spokes • 1861:
Application of aluminium to the manufacture of mathematical instruments (UK patent 1861 number 3,092) • 1863:
Drawing instrument for drawing circles or arcs from radius (UK patent 1863 number 226) • 1866:
Mathematical Drawing Instruments (UK patent 1866 number 644) • 1867:
Meteorological Instrument –
Meteorometer – to record simultaneously wind direction and pressure, temperature, humidity and rainfall (UK Patent 1867 number 3,335) • 1868:
Machines for exciting frictional electricity (UK Patent 1868 number 3,878) • 1870:
Drawing Boards, Straight Edges, etc. (UK Patent 1870 number 2,264) • 1872:
Electrical Apparatus – an improved method of constructing portable
galvanic batteries (UK Patent 1872 number 2,213) • 1874:
Circular Saw Bench (UK Patent 1874 number 411) • 1874:
Points for Mathematical Drawing Instruments – an improvement in
compass points (UK Patent 1874 number 412) • 1875:
Pendulums for equalising pressure and temperature and calculating time (UK Patent 1875 number 4,130) • 1880:
Apparatus for measuring distances (UK Patent 1880 number 2,142) • 1880:
Photographic Cameras – improvements in the lens-mounting, the dark slide and the body of the camera (UK Patent 1880 number 3,358) • 1882:
Photographic Cameras – a focal scale affixed to the camera (UK Patent 1882 number 3,268) • 1883:
Integrating Anemometer (UK Patent 1883 number 672) • 1885:
Buffer for the prevention of collisions on land and water (UK patent 12,953 granted 28 December 1885; US patent 345,552 granted 13 July 1886) • 1885:
Actinometer • 1885:
Barometer and snow gauge • 1885:
Tooth Injectors (UK Patent 1885 number 15,115) • 1886:
Improvements in Chandeliers and Pendants – to allow the workings used in raising and lowering lamps to be concealed (UK Patent 1886 number 2,701) • 1886:
Improvements in the Focussing Arrangements of Cameras (UK Patent 1886 number 2,811) • 1886:
Improvement in Knives – an improved carving knife (UK Patent 1886 number 3,357) • 1886:
Press for rending steaks tender (UK Patent 1886 number 3,991) '' caricature of the height machine – "In the
anthro-pometric laboratory"|alt=An overweight man is standing in front of the machine (represented here by the dial) and is blowing through a tube into the machine, in order to make the display show a lower weight. There is a caption: "In the anthro-pometric laboratory" • 1886: ''Machine for automatically measuring people's height'' (one of the first 'penny in the slot' machines) (
caricatured in
Moonshine and
Scraps magazine) (UK patent 4,726 granted 5 April 1886; US patent 404,317 granted 28 May 1889) • 1886:
Portable Saw (UK Patent 1886 number 10,589) • 1886: William's
Pantograph • 1887:
Heat Conductors for baking and boiling (UK Patent 1887 number 7,244) • 1887:
Apparatus connected with Spirometers for determining lung capacity. (caricatured by
H Furniss in the
Yorkshire Evening Post) (UK Patent 1887 number 13,013) • 1888:
Pen Extractor (UK patent 17,078 granted 23 November 1888; US patent 479,959 granted 2 August 1892) • 1889:
Improvements in Mining Stadiometers, Theodolites and Tacheometers (UK Patent 1889 number 12,590) • 1889:
Improvements in Lemon Squeezers (UK Patent 1889 number 18,735) • 1890:
Improvements in Apparatus for Measuring Distances – a device by which distances could be measured by the time sound took to travel, and was applied to rifles and artillery (UK Patent 1890 number 3,683) • 1892:
Improvements in Tribrach Arrangements for Instruments of Precision (UK Patent 1892 number 14,934) • 1894:
Improvements in Planimeters (UK Patent 1894 number 13,567) • 1895: ''Improvements in Surveyor's Levels'' (UK Patent 1895 number 6,229) • 1898:
Improvements in Mining Surveying Instruments – a device for taking sights vertically downwards, such as that down a shaft (UK Patent 1898 number 9,134) • 1898:
Improvements in Drawing Boards and Tee Squares (UK Patent 1898 number 22,710) • 1899:
Improvements in Surveying Instruments – a device by which the angle through which the instrument had been turned recorded itself on a dial (UK Patent 1899 number 7,864) • 1899:
Machine for cutting Brazilian Quartz lenses for spectacles • 1900:
Improvements in Dark Slides for Cameras (UK Patent 1900 number 7,664) • 1900:
Improvements in Rotary engines (UK Patent 1900 number 17,838; US Patent 717,174 granted 19 August 1902) • 1901: ''Improvements in Surveyor's Levels'' – casting the tube and vertical axis of the level in one piece (UK Patent 1901 number 10,447) • 1902:
Improvement in Self-holding Double Eyeglasses (UK Patent 1902 number 19,909) • 1902:
Improvement for Fixing Stone Skirtings to the walls of Buildings – this was used in parts of the Technical School Buildings (UK Patent 1902 number 20,222) • 1903:
Improvements in Gauges and Rods for Standard Measures – for taking exact inside and outside measures by the same gauge (UK Patent 1903 number 26,754) • 1905:
Improvements in and relating to Perspective Drawing Tables *UK Patent 1905 number 6,167) • 1908: ''Improved Appliance for Mending Surveyors' Band Chains'' (UK patent 1908 number 1,931, granted 29 January 1908) (this was Stanley's last patent)
Selected books • 1866
A descriptive treatise on mathematical drawing instruments : their construction, uses, qualities, selection, preservation, and suggestions for improvements, with hints upon drawing and colouring (which became the standard authority, in its seventh edition by 1900) • 1867
Proposition for a New Reform Bill to Fairly Represent the Interests of the People (Simpkin, Marshall & Co., London) (Proposing a simple form of
Proportional representation) • 1869
Electric disc and experiments, by a positive conductor (W.F. Stanley, Patentee, London) • 1872
Photography Made Easy: A Manual for beginners (Gregory, printers) • 1875 ''Stanley's Pretty Figure Book Arithmetic'' (reprinted 1881) • 1881
Experimental Researches into the Properties and Motions of Fluids: With theoretical deductions therefrom (E. & F.N. Spon) (this work was commended by
Darwin and
Tyndall. A supplemental work on sound motions in fluids was unfinished) • 1890 (with Tallack, H.T.)
Surveying and levelling instruments theoretically and practically described: for construction, qualities, selection, preservation, adjustments, and uses; with other apparatus and appliances used by civil engineers and surveyors in the field (E. & F.N. Spon, London) – in its fourth edition by 1914 • 1895
Notes on the Nebular Theory in Relation to Stellar, Solar, Planetary, Cometary, and Geological Phenomena (William Ford Stanley, London) • 1896
Joe Smith and his Waxworks (Fictional portrayal of the life of travelling fair people, but with an underlying message about the treatment of children. Written by "Bill Smith, with the help of Mrs. Smith and Mr. Saunders (W.F.S)") • 1903
The Case of The. Fox: a Political Utopia (Stanley's prediction of life in 1950, including predictions of the
Channel Tunnel, a unified Europe,
a simplified currency, amongst others) • 1905
"Turn to the Right." Or, a Plea for a Simple Life. A comedy in four acts (Coventry & Son) – A play performed in the Stanley Halls in May 1905
Selected magazine articles • 1877 "Barometrical and Thermometrical Clocks for Registering Mean Atmospheric Pressure and Temperature" (
Journal of the Meteorological Society, Volume 3) • 1882 "Mechanical conditions of storms, hurricanes, and cyclones" (
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, London) • 1885 "A suggestion for the improvement of radiation thermometers" (
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, London), Volume 11, Issue 54, pp. 124–127 • 1886 "On three years' work with the chrono-barometer and chrono-thermometer, 1882–84" (
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, London), Volume 12, Issue 58, pp. 115–120 • 1886 "A Simple Snow-gauge" (
Journal of the Meteorological Society, London), Volume 12 • 1887 "The Structure of the Human Race" (
Nature,
Alexander Macmillan, Cambridge), Volume 36 • 1891 "Note on a New Spirometer" (
Journal of the Anthropological Institute, London), Volume 20 ==References==